Trump administration signals it will offer broad tariff refunds. That could mean millions for companies.

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The Trump administration’s position on returning all tariffs declared illegal by the Supreme Court is slowly taking shape. But a new court document filed last week appears to acknowledge that a range of tariffs will ultimately be eligible for refunds.

The issue is the difference between so-called cleared duties and uncleared duties.

This legal distinction is critical to importers and can be worth millions of dollars as companies seek to recoup duties illegally imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977 (IEEPA).

The government’s filing last week also described ongoing progress on a four-step process that, once up and running, could take about 45 days to review and process applications.

Read more: What Trump’s tariffs mean for the economy and your wallet

TOPSHOT - U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference in the Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, DC, February 20, 2026. U.S. President Donald Trump will hold a news conference on Friday to discuss the Supreme Court's ruling on most of his tariffs, spokesperson Carolyn Leavitt said. (Photo by Mandel NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)
President Trump spoke at a press conference at the White House in February to discuss the Supreme Court’s ruling on his tariffs. (Mandelyan/AFP via Getty Images) · MANDEL NGAN via Getty Images

“In theory, this development provides the answer that many importers are seeking,” Foley & Lardner’s Greg Husisian told Yahoo Finance. He said the government’s revised order “effectively brings all IEEPA entries within the court’s refund framework.”

In other words, this means that previously paid tariffs that are currently in three different statuses – not liquidated, liquidated but still within the protest window, and tariffs where liquidation has been deemed final – may ultimately be eligible for a refund.

In a trade context, “liquidation” refers to the final calculation of duties owed and is often seen as a final seal of sorts. The process must be completed within one year of the goods being imported and duties first being imposed, but it is usually earlier, in the range of 10 to 11 months.

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The issue of liquidation led companies to preemptively file lawsuits as early as 2025, long before the Supreme Court struck down Trump’s sweeping IEEPA tariffs in February and confirmed that tariff refunds were possible.

This week’s filing is the latest concession from the Trump administration, cheering trade lawyers who have been bracing for a chaotic refund process on all fronts.

There is growing awareness that a wide range of refunds are possible, including fully liquidated tariffs.

“If the administration was going to fight on this issue, I would have expected them to say as much in this document,” Erik Smithweiss, a partner at GDLSK who focuses on trade issues, said in an interview.

He represents customers seeking refunds and said he was relieved by this latest wording, but warned that it “does not preclude the Department of Justice from one day saying ‘we did not establish this process and we do not believe it is authorized by law’ and forcing the issue to be litigated.”

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